Actor Stephen Baldwin won't be making an encore appearance in Rockland criminal court despite his arrest for driving with a suspended license in Manhattan.

Prosecutors will not reopen the Rockland property owner's tax evasion case after his Friday arrest, during which he also was ticketed for having an expired registration.

Anthony Dellicarri, who prosecuted Baldwin on the tax charge, said Friday that District Attorney Thomas Zugibe is not voiding the plea agreement with the actor. Baldwin received a conditional discharge from Rockland County Court Judge Charles Apotheker for repaying his $400,000 debt.

One of the conditions of Baldwin's non-prison sentence for a tax conviction was that he steer clear of committing another crime.

"We're not going to reopen the case for driving with a suspended license," Dellicarri said.

In April, Baldwin, 47, who owns property in Upper Grandview, made his final $100,000 payment to cover his $400,000 debt for failing to pay state income tax from 2008 to 2010.

His lawyer, Russell Yankwitt, said Friday that he was aware of Baldwin's driving arrest but declined comment.

Driving with a suspended license could be either a misdemeanor or a felony if he's charged with aggravated unlicensed operation. The exact charge could not be obtained from the New York City Police Department.

According to a report in the New York Daily News, Baldwin pleaded guilty to driving without a license in 2012, after making an illegal U-turn in the city. He paid $155 in fines and charges.

Baldwin, a born-again Christian, lead the opposition to a pornographic video and book store along the commercial corridor of Route 59 in Nyack in 2006.

The youngest of four acting Baldwin brothers had performed in films such as "Bio-Dome" and "The Usual Suspects," which he now says glorify sex and violence.

Baldwin has said he has changed his lifestyle and focus of his career, both creatively and financially. He blamed his tax troubles on trusting others to handle his money.

He recently appeared in a Christian film, titled "I'm in Love with a Church Girl."